To Cut or Cool? The Development of an Implantable Local Cooling System in Human Intractable Epilepsy as an Alternative to Surgery
Abstract number :
4.196
Submission category :
Surgery-All Ages
Year :
2006
Submission ID :
7085
Source :
www.aesnet.org
Presentation date :
12/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Published date :
Nov 30, 2006, 06:00 AM
Authors :
1Hirochika Imoto, 1Masami Fujii, 2Jouji Uchiyama, 1Nobuhiro Tanaka, 3Kimihiko Nakano, 1Sadahiro Nomura, 1Hirosuke Fujisawa, 2Takashi Saito, and 1Michiyasu S
Local brain cooling using an implantable cooling system is an attractive prophylactic technique for seizures since it has a potential to be an alternative to a surgical resection of the epileptogenic foci. In this report, we applied the newly devised local brain cooling system to intractable epilepsy in humans., We utilized a Peltier chip as the cooling device and therefore applied this cooling device to two patients with medically intractable epilepsy. During surgery, cooling was performed for two minutes in the human cortex where the epileptiform discharges (EDs) were recorded and therefore it had to be resected. Electrocorticograms and the temperature just beneath the cooling site were recorded before and during cooling. Changes of EDs between before and during cooling were quantitatively analyzed., The first case was a 12-year-old girl with temporal lobe epilepsy, while the second case was a 2-year-old boy with parietal lobe epilepsy caused by tuberous sclerosis. In both cases, EDs diminished during the cooling process when the temperature of the brain surface reached less than 25[deg]C., This is the first report demonstrating the effectiveness of the cooling device using a Peltier chip for the treatment of human epilepsy. Owing to recent advances in the precision machinery industry, an implantable local cooling system in humans is therefore expected to become a reality in the near future.,
Surgery